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Journal ArticleDOI

Distress and self-restraint as measures of adjustment across the life span: Confirmatory factor analyses in clinical and nonclinical samples.

Daniel A. Weinberger
- 01 Jun 1997 - 
- Vol. 9, Iss: 2, pp 132-135
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TLDR
The Weinberger Adjustment Inventory (WAI) was designed as a hierarchical self-report measure of general social-emotional adjustment in older children and adults as mentioned in this paper, where superordinate constructs of distress (i.e., anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, and low well-being) and selfrestraint (ie, impulse control, suppression of aggression, consideration of others, and responsibility) are each operationalized as a composite of four subscales Confirmatory factor analyses were conducted using 6 samples (ns = 153-392; N = 1,486) The factor
Abstract
The Weinberger Adjustment Inventory (WAI; D Weinberger & G Schwartz, 1990) was designed as a hierarchical self-report measure of general social-emotional adjustment in older children and adults The superordinate constructs of distress (ie, anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, and low well-being) and self-restraint (ie, impulse control, suppression of aggression, consideration of others, and responsibility) are each operationalized as a composite of 4 subscales Confirmatory factor analyses were conducted using 6 samples (ns = 153-392; N = 1,486) The factor structure was highly comparable with a mean comparative fit index (CFI) of968 for youth (ages 10-17), young adults (ages 18-30), and adults (ages 31-65) within both clinical outpatient and nonclinical populations The results suggest that there may be little justification for the routine practice of using different measures of general adjustment when investigating older children vs adults

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Citations
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The Self and Autobiographical Memory: Correspondence and Coherence

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Facial expression of pain: an evolutionary account.

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Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Among Female Juvenile Offenders

TL;DR: These findings provide a starting point for more detailed investigations of the relations between trauma, psychopathology, and violence and suggest that the study of trauma may offer a new way of looking at links between victim and perpetrator.
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Consistency and development of prosocial dispositions: A longitudinal study

TL;DR: The results support the view that there are stable individual differences in prosocial responding that have their origins in early childhood and that sympathy appeared to partially mediate the relation of early spontaneous sharing to later prosocial dispositions.
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Sociocognitive and Behavioral Correlates of a Measure of Prosocial Tendencies for Adolescents

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the psychometric properties of a multidimensional measure of prosocial behaviors to use with early adolescents and middle adolescents and found that the measure showed adequate reliability and evidence of validity for PTM-R.
References
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Evaluating model fit.

Book

Structural Equation Modeling with EQS and EQS/WINDOWS: Basic Concepts, Applications, and Programming

TL;DR: This chapter discusses Structural Equation Models Using the EQS Program and discusses how EQS/Windows and the Multitrait-Multimethod Model improved the quality of EQS models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structures of personality and their relevance to psychopathology.

TL;DR: This work offers an integrative hierarchical model--composed of four higher order traits--that is congruent with each of the major structural subtraditions within personality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distress and restraint as superordinate dimensions of self-reported adjustment: a typological perspective.

TL;DR: A large number of nonadditive patterns consistent with a priori group descriptions corroborated the utility of a person-centered, typological approach and provided an empirically derived, prototypic description of each adjustment style.
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